Review ParaNormal Romance.org
"a wonderfully fun whodunit"
Misadventures seems a bit of an understatement when it comes to Maggie Phillips. Maggie, a stay-at-home mom with in-laws from hell, has perfected the art of being in the wrong place at the wrong time. At a soiree with her gorgeous husband, a former Navy SEAL, her best friend talks her into taking a cleaning job, and it's all downhill from there. Dead people, implements of torture (not used), quick one-liners and hilarious similes comprise this comic mystery.
Jennifer L. Hart has written a wonderfully fun story, and I love Maggie's character. She's one of the most realistic characters I've read about recently, and everyone can empathize with her; from page one when she has to re-wash her hair with Head & Shoulders because she found dandruff and then used cuticle scissors to remove the one straggling gray hair. And, Neil is also terrific with just the right combination of humor, love and macho male protectiveness.
Hart has her pacing down to a science. And, she throws in a few surprises just to keep you guessing. I had no idea who the villain was, and I hate it when that happens. In addition to Maggie, Neil and their two boys, we meet a nice old guy, an older Annie Oakley type, a couple police officers and a greasy "gym rat." Her characters, both primary and secondary, have good complexity, and she keeps you laughing all the time you're trying to guess whodunit. From the title, and the ending, it sounds like this will be a series, and I definitely look forward to future installments.
Reviewed by Katherine Petersen
Posted November 21, 2008
The Misadventures of the Laundry Hag: Skeletons in the Closet Wild Child Publishing
September 28, 2008
REVIEWED BY:
Black Orchid
SCORE:
A full bottle
Author: Jennifer L. Hart
Publisher: Wild Child Publishing
REVIEW:
Maggie accepts a job with the local posh-knob, Mrs. Kline, cleaning her vast, mansion-like house. Mr. Kline is a bit of an oddball and collects memorabilia from times past, like iron maidens…
However, Mr. Kline faces murder charges, and Maggie is his only alibi. The detective in charge of the case has the idea that Maggie is doing naughties with Mr. Kline, hence her being his alibi. It’s lucky Maggie’s husband trusts her!
The detective enlists Maggie’s help in finding information out about the people who move in the same circles as Mr. Kline, so she broadens her cleaning business and cleans house for several other people. Not only does she meet new folks and fill a void in her life, but she employs first a pregnant teen and then an elderly man.
However, twists and turns abound, and what is at first an apparently ‘clean-cut’ murder case, turns into something rather more sinister. With an excellent climax, The Misadventures of the Laundry Hag: Skeletons in the Closet is, quite simply, a must read for all people who love a good mystery and a jolly good laugh.
A really enjoyable read—laugh out loud funny—one that I’m glad to have had the privilege to review. I look forward to more of Ms. Hart’s work. Excellent!
Posted in Wild Child Publishing
From Terri at Night Owl Romance Reviews
Maggie is a housewife in the wilds of Massachusetts. She’s from the south but married Neil, a former SEAL, and when he left the Navy, he moved his family to his home. Maggie is happy as a housewife but in an area where women work outside the house as professionals, she’s seen as being a bit different. Still, she’s making a good life for herself, Neil and their two boys.
When attending a party in their neighborhood, Maggie is given the opportunity to clean her neighbor’s house. She’s reluctant to do so but when a check for $500 shows up in the mail, she’s ready to clean. Little does she know that this one job would be changing her life forever.
Maggie accidentally leaves her cell phone in the house. When she returns to get it she is meet by the wife’s sister. They enter the house only to find the wife having sex with someone who definitely was not her husband. Leaving quickly, Maggie calls and arranges to pick up her phone the next day from the husband. This meeting gives the husband an alibi when the police find the wife killed.
As Maggie meets with local police, she is drug more and more into their investigation endangering not only her life but the lives of her family. She also finds that her cleaning business is taking off to the point that she is needing to hire some help. To add to her chaos, her bitch of a mother-in-law calls to inform Maggie that she is now doing the Thanksgiving Dinner and she will be bringing some important clients with her so Maggie had better do it right!
As things getting more and more complicated, you could only laugh at some of the problems Maggie seems to have. She is looking for help and her husband calls around trying to find her some. What he finds is a pregnant teenage daughter of an old military buddy. Not exactly what she needs to do major cleaning! Her mother-in-law, knowing Maggie wants to get new living room furniture, decides to help by sending her a white sofa and love seat. Who sends white furniture to a house with two boys? And how do you keep it white for more than an hour?
Maggie’s relationship with her husband, Neil, though is special. Maggie admits she’s just a regular person who has found a gray hair or two. She’s depressed when she realizes Neil wears a smaller size jean than she does. Still, Neil is her rock. Neil cares about Maggie and would do anything to keep her happy and safe, even take time off from work if she needs him to. This is good when Maggie needs to get Neil to pick her up from the police station in the middle of the night. They may not always agree but Maggie and Neil love and support each other and it shows.
The mystery of who did it was well done. I had no idea as to who the murderer was until the end. As the story played out there were several suspects, some you wanted to be the murder and others you actually liked. Maggie’s trying to help the police was interesting as she bumbled her way through this investigation. She had no idea as to what she was doing but there were too many dead people showing up for her not to be doing something right!
The secondary characters were even interesting from the bitch of a mother-in-law to the mother-in-law’s gay cook to Maggie’s deadbeat brother. Each added its own spice to the mixture and created a delightful creation. I enjoyed reading about Maggie’s son’s problems with his book report and her brother looking for an easy way to get rich. Maggie, if nothing else, has a full and interesting life.